SABR 44: Haupert, Sanderson, Crownover win 2014 presentation awards
Michael Haupert has won the 2014 Doug Pappas Award for the best oral research presentation and Jimmy Sanderson and Matthew Crownover have won the USA Today Sports Weekly Award for the best poster presentation at SABR 44 in Houston, Texas.
Haupert, a professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and the co-chair of SABR’s Business of Baseball Research Committee, won the Pappas Award for his presentation, “William Hulbert and the Birth of the Business of Professional Baseball,” which he delivered Friday during SABR 44 at the Royal Sonesta Houston.
His abstract is posted below:
Hall of Famer William Ambrose Hulbert was president of the Chicago White Stockings, founder of the National League, and its second president. At the time of his premature death in 1882 he had revolutionized the business and the game of baseball. His impact on the organization of professional sports leagues has endured to this day. Haupert tells the story of William Hulbert as the story of the evolution of the American business organization. Hulbert employed fundamental business principles to create the National League, which replaced the National Association, the first professional sports league in America. Through the discovery of primary documents, including letters, league minutes, and financial records Haupert describes several previously unknown facts concerning Hulbert’s life and work, and will correct many inaccuracies that have been repeated over the past century.
To learn more about William Hulbert, read Haupert’s SABR biography of the National League founder.
The Doug Pappas Award — originally established as the USA Today Sports Weekly Award in 1992 and renamed in 2004 to honor the late baseball researcher — includes a $250 cash prize with a matching amount donated to SABR.
Sanderson, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Clemson University, and Crownover, a rising junior at Clemson, won the USA Today Sports Weekly Award for their poster presentation, “Building From Within or Acquiring from Without: An Analysis of Roster Construction for Post-Season MLB Teams from 2009-2013.”
Their abstract is posted below:
To what extent should an organization build their roster through homegrown players, or through acquisitions? Sanderson and Crownover examined the rosters for all playoff teams in MLB for the 5-year period from 2009 – 2013, using variables for player position, league affiliation, and how the player was acquired, and also incorporated the player’s WAR value. Using regression analysis and sampling, they explore whether having homegrown at certain key positions does, in fact, correlate with better performance.
The USA Today Sports Weekly Award — first presented in 1990 as the John W. Cox Award — includes a $125 cash prize with a matching donation to SABR.
Honorable mentions for the oral presentation were:
- David W. Smith, “Why Does the Home Team Score So Much in the First Inning?”
- Chuck Hildebrandt and Mike Lynch, “The Retroactive All-Star Game Project”
- Herm Krabbenhoft, “The Definitive Resolution of the 1912 NL Triple Crown Discrepancy”
For more coverage of SABR 44, visit SABR.org/convention.
Originally published: August 3, 2014. Last Updated: July 27, 2020.